Boundaries

(Chris Devlin) #1

340


them. This is often caused by boundary conflicts, when people with-
draw to avoid hurt and risk, and end up empty-handed.


Doing Too Much in the Relationship


Many people with boundary problems overstep their bounds and
don’t know when to stop giving of themselves. They will put their lives
and hearts on hold for someone, only to find out that the other person
was willing to take all that, but never really wanted to deeply commit.
Good boundaries help you know how much to give, and when to stop
giving.


Freedom without Responsibility
Freedom must always be accompanied by responsibility. When one
person enjoys the freedom of dating, and takes no responsibility for
himself, problems occur. Someone who is “having his cake and eating
it too” in his dating relationship is in this category. This is Todd’s situ-
ation. He enjoyed Heather but didn’t want to take any responsibility to
develop the relationship, though a great deal of time had passed.


Control Issues


More often than not, one person wants to get serious sooner than
another. Sometimes in this situation, the more serious person
attempts to rein in the other person by manipulation, guilt, domina-
tion, and intimidation. Love has become secondary, and control has
become primary.


Not Taking Responsibility to Say No
This describes the “nice guy” who allows disrespect and poor treat-
ment by his date, and either minimizes the reality that he is being mis-
treated, or simply hopes that one day she will stop. He disowns his
responsibility to set a limit on bad things happening to him.


Sexual Impropriety


Couples often have difficulty keeping appropriate physical limits.
They either avoid taking responsibility for the issue, or one person is
the only one with the “brakes,” or they ignore the deeper issues that
are driving the activity.


Boundaries in Dating
Free download pdf